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A procedure for observing rocky exoplanets to maximize the likelihood that atmospheric oxygen will be a biosignature

Authors :
Desch, Steven J.
Kane, Stephen
Lisse, Carey M.
Unterborn, Cayman T.
Hartnett, Hilairy E.
Shim, Sang-Heon
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Here we advocate an observational strategy to help prioritize exoplanet observations. It starts with more easily obtained observational data, and ranks exoplanets for more difficult follow-up observations based on the likelihood of avoiding planets for which oxygen is a false positives or even an inconclusive signature of life. We find that for oxygen to be a robust biosignature, both land and surface water must be present. Landless exoplanets have much slower biogeochemical cycles, so while oxygenic photosynthesizing life could exist on such planets, it could not produce oxygen at a rate competitive with abiotic rates such as photolysis. These habitable planets, whose life would not be detectable, should be avoided.<br />Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, white paper submitted in response to the solicitation of feedback for the "Astrobiology Science Strategy for the Search for Life in the Universe" by the National Academy of Sciences

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1801.06935
Document Type :
Working Paper